Business Day

Venture capital flees as government shuts down small business support

- Chris Hart ● Hart is executive chair of Impact Investment Management.

Small business is the lifeblood of any economy, yet the government has been shooting itself in the foot — and small businesses between the eyeballs — regarding nurturing entreprene­urs.

A flawed but vital tax incentive programme for venture capital known as Section 12J (S12J) was terminated at endJune, yet there is nothing to replace it.

Hundreds of small firms and startups were boosted by S12J, which enabled taxpayers to channel part of their tax liability into an approved investment. Instead of their taxes disappeari­ng into the black hole of the fiscus, which is not noted for the efficient management of our taxes, the money could instead be used to back a business, with the investor reaping healthy rewards if the investment was a success.

S12J was criticised for the way in which some vanity projects were funded, but most projects it has brought to life have been worthwhile and sustainabl­e businesses — largely blackowned, often in townships or rural areas, and always helping tackle this country’s shameful scar of mass unemployme­nt.

RED TAPE

The future of venture capital in SA is uncertain without these S12J incentives. So what is to be done? If the government does not want to give incentives to support small businesses, it should compensate for this by removing regulatory barriers these businesses face.

Try to launch a business and you will be swamped by an avalanche of onerous red tape. It does not matter whether you are big or small; the burden is equally daunting.

Regulators require you to incur costs upfront — before you can start to bring in any income. This can destroy any hope for budding entreprene­urs, tripping them up at the first hurdle.

I am referring to licensing requiremen­ts and similar obstacles. Before you can raise a cent you have to go through a lot of cash burn, which prolongs the hazardous startup phase before you can reach break-even. It can be, and often is, fatal.

It is an enormous problem if all scarce resources are required to meet regulatory requiremen­ts instead of being able to focus on getting the business off the ground through attention to marketing and sales. From a financing point of view a redtape mountain is a barrier to getting a small business in place, since so many unproducti­ve costs have had to be funded.

Surely the regulatory bodies should behave much more as nurturing bodies, rather than as policing bodies, regarding small businesses? Ask any small businesspe­rson: they are far from nurturing.

What about the investors, the venture capitalist­s? Without the S12J carrot, and facing the stick of red tape and bureaucrac­y, moving into other parts of Africa is looking attractive. Venture capital is starting to flee SA as the government has shut down the vital support S12J was offering.

SA is a far worse location for startups than the environmen­t in our neighbours. The obstacles and barriers that are a hindrance to establishi­ng and operating a business in SA do not exist in jurisdicti­ons such as Botswana, Rwanda, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius or Namibia. Even Nigeria is starting to move up the global competitiv­eness ladder.

In these more businessfr­iendly emerging market environmen­ts, the potential of entreprene­urship can more easily be converted into opportunit­ies. This is a shame, as the latest unemployme­nt numbers illustrate anew the desperate need for the creation of new businesses to offer new employment opportunit­ies.

SA’s formal unemployme­nt rate of well more than 30% — double that level for young people — is a direct consequenc­e of too few SMEs. So where are these SMEs that need to be formed? They are shut out even before they can get going, or are set up for failure.

NO VOICE

Youth Day is commemorat­ed annually, but our young people are being failed. They want jobs, not pious speeches from politician­s. There are so many problems faced by SA society that new businesses could be establishe­d to help solve: a problem is an opportunit­y for a canny entreprene­ur. With the untimely demise of S12J, people with money are more likely to invest outside the country due to a substantia­l and long-term drop in investor confidence.

One reason for the collapse of the S12J tax incentive is that small business has no voice. Businesses that have the lobbying capacity will tend to support the raising of barriers to entry because they are already in. The ones that need the lobbying muscle lack the resources, and their voice is not sought. There is nothing I am aware of to give a voice to this constituen­cy, which so vitally needs a voice.

Later this year, President Cyril Ramaphosa will host another of his investment conference­s, at which large firms will be rewarded for their generosity with a presidenti­al handshake, or more likely by a Covid-19-compliant elbow tap. But the big successes are masking the many small tales of failure and desperatio­n. It is time for the president to spend less time on the red carpet and pay more attention to the red tape that is strangling small businesses.

TRY TO LAUNCH A BUSINESS AND YOU WILL BE SWAMPED BY AN AVALANCHE OF ONEROUS RED TAPE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa